Floods in Nigeria: Underlying Causes and Solutions
By Yemi Olakitan
Flooding is not unfamiliar to Nigerians. In some areas of the nation, flooding happens every year. But from one year to the next, the severity changes. The effects can be minor in some years or disastrous in others. Like the floods of 2012, the 2022 floods have inflicted enormous damage. More than 7.7 million people in 32 of the 36 states were impacted ten years ago. 1.4 million People in 27 states have been impacted by the latest floods.
Different kinds of flooding exist. Fluvial flooding is one of them, and it happens when rivers overflow their banks. The second is coastal flooding, which takes place when water from the ocean engulfs nearby low-lying lands. The third is pluvial flooding, which happens as a result of severe, torrential rain.
Specifically, the three In Nigeria, the three types of flooding are interrelated because the peaks of all three flooding types can coincide seasonally.
Some of the principal causes of flooding in Nigeria are rapid urbanisation, poor spatial planning and poor solid waste management, including drainage systems being used as dump sites. Nigeria’s population has been growing rapidly – it’s currently estimated to be over 200 million from 122.3 million in 2000. There has also been rapid urbanisation in the last six decades. Today about 55% of the population lives in urban centres.
The rapid population growth combined with urbanisation and poor spatial planning means that people are building on flood-prone areas such as river banks, wetlands and low-lying areas. Another consequence of poor spatial planning is that storm water and drainage systems are built that aren’t fit for purpose. In many of Nigeria’s cities, the storm water systems are inadequate to handle flooding peaks. As a result, communities living downstream are sometimes flooded.
Poor solid waste management is a key contributor to the problem of flooding. Often, drainage systems are used as dump sites, blocking the flow of water.
Another factor has been a change in rainfall patterns in the country, particularly an increase in extreme events. Rainstorms lasting up to five days are becoming more common. And it’s predicted that they will increase due to climate change. These extreme rainstorm events cause serious flooding.
Another feature of the country that adds to flooding risk is that it has numerous rivers, including transboundary river systems such as the Rivers Niger and Benue. Poor water infrastructure developments such as dams, reservoirs and bank protection contribute to the annual flooding.
For example, the release of excess water from the Lagdo Dam in Cameroon, which often contributes to flooding in Nigeria, was supposed to be contained by a dam, the Dasin Hausa Dam in Adamawa State, Northeast Nigeria. But after more than 40 years, the dam still isn’t complete.
Many of the rivers in Nigeria are poorly managed and regulated. Siltation of major rivers such as the River Niger, as well as removal of vegetation from river banks and wetlands for agricultural purposes, are all outcomes of poor water resources management which have also contributed to flooding.
The country can address the flooding menace and minimise its effect through a multi-pronged approach.
First, a combination of hard infrastructural solutions and ecosystem-based adaptation should be pursued. Examples include the construction of dams and reservoirs to hold excess water, riverbank protection, construction of levees and spillways, appropriate drainage systems and storm water management regimes, and dredging of some of the major rivers in Nigeria.
Of particular interest is the completion of the Dasin Hausa Dam in Adamawa State and prioritisation of an appropriate storm-water management regime.
Examples of ecosystem-based solutions could include reforestation in important river catchments, planting native vegetation on flood plains that have been claimed for cropping, and creating riparian buffers through vegetation.
Each of these options would need to be carefully studied and implemented.
Nigeria also needs to strengthen its regulatory, governance and institutional capacity in the area of spatial planning, regional cooperation on transboundary water resources management, emergency response time, flood prediction, and enforcement of environmental and spatial planning laws.
Building on flood plains must be avoided at all costs. Awareness raising, education and disaster risk communication and messaging need to be strengthened to minimize flooding effects in Nigeria. The Nigerian Hydrological Services Agency, the Nigerian Meteorological Agency and the National Emergency Management Agency are all important institutions that need resources and capacity to avert flooding in Nigeria.